Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Says Vow To Balance Budget In Four Years Is 'very' Cast In Stone

The Canadian Press, 17 Dec, 2015 11:15 AM
  • Justin Trudeau Says Vow To Balance Budget In Four Years Is 'very' Cast In Stone
OTTAWA — Even as the economic hurdles pile up, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insists his pledge to balance the federal books in four years is "very" cast in stone.
 
On top of the balanced budget, Trudeau told The Canadian Press on Wednesday that the Liberal government will also live up to its other fiscal "anchor" to lower the debt-to-GDP ratio every year until the end of its mandate.
 
Trudeau's remarks follow several revelations that his new government is standing on significantly shakier fiscal footing than it had predicted.
 
For example, the Liberals have recently shied away from another election commitment: to keep annual deficits over the next two years under $10 billion.
 
Trudeau was asked Wednesday how cast in stone his pledge was to balance the budget in four years.
 
"Very," he said during a year-end roundtable interview with Canadian Press journalists in Ottawa.
 
"I think one of the things that Canadians expect is a level of fiscal responsibility that we've been able to demonstrate in the past and we're certainly going to demonstrate it in the future."
 
The Liberals, who made billions of dollars in campaign spending vows, are facing many obstacles that stand in the way of fulfilling their balanced-budget goal.
 
Pulling the books back into the black is a tougher target than lowering the debt-to-GDP ratio, which represents a government's capacity to pay back debt. The ratio — also known as the debt burden — is reached by dividing total federal debt by the overall size of the economy, as measured by nominal GDP.
 
Last month, the government said in its fall fiscal update that the books inherited from the Conservatives and a weaker-than-expected economy will drive the country billions of dollars deeper in the hole than it had anticipated during the campaign.
 
 
The parliamentary budget office later issued forecasts that suggested the Liberals could be poised to generate annual deficits up to $15 billion once their costed, big-ticket election pledges are accounted for. In addition, the party has also made several uncosted vows.
 
Earlier this month, the Liberals revealed that their new tax package, which will raise taxes on the highest earners and lower the rate on the middle tax bracket, will actually siphon more than $1 billion net per year from the treasury. In their platform, the Liberals had predicted the plan would be revenue neutral.
 
Trudeau vowed during the campaign to respect the $10-billion upper limit for deficits in 2016-17 and 2017-18 unless the economic situation got radically worse.
 
"Many of you pressed me on, 'Is that an absolute cap? What happens if the economy gets significantly worse?' " Trudeau said Wednesday.
 
"And I said, 'We're going to stay open with Canadians about what we need to do to create growth.'
 
"What we were elected on was a commitment to help Canadians grow the economy and that's what we're going to stay focused on."
 
The Liberals are banking that their commitments — to spend billions on infrastructure and to implement tax changes benefiting middle earners — will kick-start the struggling economy and create jobs.
 
When asked if balancing the budget would involve austerity, Trudeau said he's going to focus on growing the economy in responsible, meaningful ways.
 
Along the way, he said he's committed to being open and transparent about the fiscal steps involved in helping the economy.
 
Trudeau was also asked about projections that it could take longer than four years for infrastructure cash to trickle through the economy and how the math behind his tax changes didn't work out quite as well as he had planned.
 
 
"You can spend a lot of time talking about hypotheticals and I'm not going to engage in that," he said. 
 
"What I am going to do is what I've always done is say, look, we are going to put forward a plan that is going to invest in Canadians in education, in innovation, in infrastructure that's going to create growth."

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario Couple Tries To Finish Preparations Hours Before Syrian Family Arrives

Ontario Couple Tries To Finish Preparations Hours Before Syrian Family Arrives
TORONTO — Hours before a family of Syrian refugees is set to land in Ontario, the retired couple who helped sponsor them is scrambling to wrap up preparations for their arrival.

Ontario Couple Tries To Finish Preparations Hours Before Syrian Family Arrives

No Criminal Charges To Be Laid In Deadly 2014 Fire At Quebec Seniors' Home

No Criminal Charges To Be Laid In Deadly 2014 Fire At Quebec Seniors' Home
RIVIERE-DU-LOUP, Que. — No criminal charges will be laid in the fire that killed 32 people at a seniors' residence in Quebec nearly two years ago, the Crown announced Monday.

No Criminal Charges To Be Laid In Deadly 2014 Fire At Quebec Seniors' Home

WATCH: Ottawa School Choir's Welcome To Syrian Refugees Attracts Worldwide Attention

WATCH: Ottawa School Choir's Welcome To Syrian Refugees Attracts Worldwide Attention
The song was posted on YouTube last week under the title "Welcome to Canada Syrian Refugees."

WATCH: Ottawa School Choir's Welcome To Syrian Refugees Attracts Worldwide Attention

B.C. Children's Representative Should Focus On Advocacy, Not Oversight: Report

B.C. Children's Representative Should Focus On Advocacy, Not Oversight: Report
A report looking into the British Columbia's Ministry of Children and Family Development after recent high-profile failures has criticized the provincial children's watchdog while praising the ministry for its work amid starved resources.

B.C. Children's Representative Should Focus On Advocacy, Not Oversight: Report

Group Representing 73 Businesses Calls On B.C. To Halt Logging Of Ancient Trees

  The valley is full of ancient old-growth trees, and the Chamber of Commerce says tourists who come to see them have created a multibillion-dollar economy along Vancouver Island's west coast.

Group Representing 73 Businesses Calls On B.C. To Halt Logging Of Ancient Trees

Flights To Canada Booked For Relatives Of Drowned Syrian Refugee Boy Alan Kurdi

Tima Kurdi said her brother Mohammad Kurdi, along with his wife and five children, are scheduled to arrive into Vancouver the morning of Dec. 28.

Flights To Canada Booked For Relatives Of Drowned Syrian Refugee Boy Alan Kurdi